2 – Gallery

Let’s start with the bundle. It includes the notebook, a power supply, some paper docs, and… a backpack!

The backpack:

The notebook:

The keyboard is very comfortable and is illuminated (AURA illumination).

ROG Strix GL553 has a specially-designed chiclet gaming keyboard with 4-area RGB lighting and red-backlit scissor-switch keys that offer you 2.5mm of travel distance for tactile keystrokes. It also features highlighted WASD keys, so you know where your hands need to be. On top of that, a larger space bar and isolated arrow keys ensure that everything you need is kept within easy reach.

CPU and system

GPUs

4 – Benchmarks

4.1 – CrystalDiskMark

This NVMe 128GB SSD boot disk offers correct read speed (538 MB/s) but poor write speed (182 MB/s). I will do a serious upgrade of this ssd in an upcoming article, so stay tuned.

4.2 – 3DMark Sky Diver

Desktop GPUs have been tested on a Core i5 6600K based testbed with 16GB RAM + Windows 10 64-bit.

29024 – ASUS GeForce GTX 1080 Strix – R368.51

25134 – ASUS GeForce GTX 980 Ti – R353.06

23038 – ASUS GeForce GTX 980 Strix – R344.75

22637 – ASUS G752VY – GeForce GTX 980M – R368.81

21964 – MSI Radeon R9 290X Gaming – Catalyst 14.9 WHQL

21811 – Gainward GeForce GTX 970 Phantom – R344.75

20274 – EVGA GeForce GTX 780 – R344.75

17570 – MSI Radeon HD 7970 – Catalyst 14.9 WHQL

17533 – EVGA GeForce GTX 680 – R344.75

16479 – ASUS GL553VD – GeForce GTX 1050 – R378.49

4.3 – 3DMark Fire Strike

15583 – ASUS GeForce GTX 1080 Strix – R368.51

12514 – ASUS GeForce GTX 980 Ti – R353.06

10574 – ASUS GeForce GTX 980 Strix – R344.75

9382 – MSI Radeon R9 290X Gaming – Catalyst 14.9 WHQL

8870 – MSI GTX 970 CLASSIC 4GD5T OC – R344.75

8593 – ASUS G752VY – GeForce GTX 980M – R368.81

8203 – EVGA GeForce GTX 780 – R344.75

6572 – MSI Radeon HD 7970 – Catalyst 14.9 WHQL

6399 – ASUS Strix GTX 960 DC2 OC 4GB – R353.06

6235 – EVGA GeForce GTX 680 – R344.75

5446 – ASUS GL553VD – GeForce GTX 1050 – R378.49

4.4 – FurMark 1.18.2

FurMark is an OpenGL 2 benchmark that renders a furry donut. This benchmark is known for its extreme GPU workload.

Settings: Preset:1080 (1920×1080)

7151 points (119 FPS) – ASUS GeForce GTX 1080 Strix – R368.51

6233 points (103 FPS) – ASUS GeForce GTX 980 Ti – R353.06

4660 points (77 FPS) – ASUS GeForce GTX 980 Strix – R344.75

4592 points (76 FPS) – MSI Radeon R9 290X Gaming – Catalyst 14.9 WHQL

4050 points (67 FPS) – EVGA GeForce GTX 780 – R344.75

3339 points (55 FPS) – ASUS G752VY – GTX 980M R368.81

3335 points (55 FPS) – MSI GTX 970 CLASSIC 4GD5T OC – R344.75

2951 points (49 FPS) – MSI Radeon HD 7970 – Catalyst 14.9 WHQL

2733 points (45 FPS) – EVGA GeForce GTX 680 – R344.75

2566 points (42 FPS) – ASUS Strix GTX 960 DC2 OC 4GB – R353.06

1885 points (32 FPS)- ASUS GL553VD – GeForce GTX 1050 – R378.49

5 – Burn-in Test

This quick burn-in test has been done with Geeks3D FurMark 1.18.2. The goal is to see if GPU throttling is present. It was a good surprise. There is no throttling at all. The base clock of the GTX 1050 is 1354MHz and the boost clock is 1493MHz. During the FurMark test, the GPU core was clocked at 1430MHz with a GPU temperature of 73°C.

At idle, the GPU temperature was around 39°C.

And the noise? At idle the noise is barely audible, we can hear the fan but it’s very acceptable. Under load, it’s another story, the fan noise is loud. Look at the thermal imaging under load and you will understand.

Thermal Imaging

The GL553VD at idle:

The GL553VD under load:

6 – Battery Test

On ASUS GL553VD homepage, I couldn’t find any information about how long the built-in battery can last. The only info is: 4 Cells Battery. So I decided to do a simple test: I unplugged the power connector and I worked on this laptop (internet browsing, youtube video, zip/unzip files, as well as other simple desktop tasks — not 3D intensive tasks). Here are the results:

20h20 (start of the test) – battery: 98%

22h11 – battery: 42%

22h46 – battery: 25%

23h04 – battery: 10%

Conclusion: around three little hours to empty the battery. Hey, it’s a gaming notebook after all…

7 – Conclusion

Let’s start with the thumb-up things. The GL553 features a brand new Kaby Lake Core i7 7700HQ CPU (with 8 logical cores) and a Pascal-based GeForce GTX 1050 GPU. The keyboard is very pleasant and the RGB backlighting is very cool (colors can be customized with the AURA software). The audio system (essentially the speakers!) produces a correct sound and the fullHD anti-glare display (1920×1080) with wide viewing angles is excellent. The DVD drive is handy and the presence of a RJ45 connector is very appreciable. The backpack is also a nice surprise. I like it.

There is no GPU throttling which is very good (not like on the G501VW with a GTX 960M!).

This GL553VD comes with 16GB of DDR4-2400 memory. This is a correct amount of system memory and should be enough in most of cases. But if you need more memory you can add a second 16GB module for a total of 32GB.

Now the thumb-down things. With a fresh install of Windows 10 (I always do fresh install of Windows on notebooks), the notebook is noisy. Not all the time but often. You launch firefox and you hear the cooling fan. You unzip an archive and you hear the cooling fan. Actually you hear the cooling system very often for common 2D tasks on Windows. I don’t talk about 3D applications and video games. I talk about non-intensive tasks. Okay we have a Core i7 7700HQ but this kind of noise is not acceptable in 2017!

The touchpad is not good especially the left click. I don’t know if this is only on my sample but I don’t like this touchpad. The last time I tested a similar touchpad, it was on the ASUS G501VW: the touchpad of the G501 worked fine and was pleasant. But to be honest, I don’t care about the touchpad because I use a real mouse…

I would have put a faster boot disk in this kind of notebook. The Sandisk offers good reading performances but writing performances are similar to mechanical disks… In a next article, I will replace the Sandisk by a really fast SSD (Update – 2017.02.13: GL553VD updated with a Samsung 960 PRO).

With a poor 3-hour battery life, don’t forget the power adapter!

All the previous drawbacks can be fixed and when they are fixed, the GL553VD is a nice notebook. It’s not the ultimate gaming weapon because the GTX 1050 is rather an entry level GPU but for a graphics developer, this notebook is perfect. If you need a 15-inch gaming notebook with a reasonable price and a nice design (black brushed aluminium case), the ROG Strix GL553 is a good choice.

I want to buy ASUS GL553VD-DS71 15.6, but in its specification , there is no ssd card and really now i don’t want to spend money for ssd card.
I want to know , is there any input for ssd and can I add ssd cared in future?
thanks